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My Husband Traded My Mother’s Life for His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Traded My Mother’s Life for His Mistress

The smell of antiseptic usually made my stomach turn, but tonight, it smelled like hope. I sat by the hospital bed, holding my mother’s frail hand, tracing the paper-thin skin over her knuckles. Her eyes, clouded by the milky haze of advanced corneal disease, stared unseeingly at the ceiling. For the first time in months, she wasn’t trembling. "Tomorrow, Elyse," she whispered, her voice a dry rattle. "I’ll see your face again tomorrow." "You will, Mom. I promise." I squeezed her hand, my other hand instinctively clutching the pearl necklace she had given me for my wedding—my anchor. The heavy door swept open. I turned, expecting a nurse, but it was Collin. My husband looked every inch the Chief of Ophthalmology: pristine white coat, silver tie perfectly knotted, his jaw set in that professional grimace I had learned to read too well.
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Chapter 1

The smell of antiseptic usually made my stomach turn, but tonight, it smelled like hope. I sat by the hospital bed, holding my mother’s frail hand, tracing the paper-thin skin over her knuckles. Her eyes, clouded by the milky haze of advanced corneal disease, stared unseeingly at the ceiling. For the first time in months, she wasn’t trembling.

"Tomorrow, Elyse," she whispered, her voice a dry rattle. "I’ll see your face again tomorrow."

"You will, Mom. I promise." I squeezed her hand, my other hand instinctively clutching the pearl necklace she had given me for my wedding—my anchor.

The heavy door swept open. I turned, expecting a nurse, but it was Collin. My husband looked every inch the Chief of Ophthalmology: pristine white coat, silver tie perfectly knotted, his jaw set in that professional grimace I had learned to read too well. But he didn't look at me. He looked at the chart at the foot of the bed.

"We have a problem," Collin said, his voice clipped.

My stomach dropped. "Is it her vitals? Is her pressure too high?"

"The donor cornea," he said, finally meeting my eyes. His gaze was cool, clinical. "It’s been reallocated."

The air left the room. "Reallocated? Collin, she’s prepped. The surgery is at six a.m."

"A critical emergency came in. A young woman. Ruptured globe. If we don’t operate immediately, she loses the eye permanently. Triage protocols, Elyse. You know how this works."

I stood up, my chair scraping loudly against the linoleum. "Mom has been waiting six months. Her condition is critical. She can’t navigate her own home anymore."

"She isn't in danger of losing the organ entirely," Collin countered, stepping closer, his height suddenly looming over me. He smelled of expensive soap and something else—faint, sweet perfume that wasn't mine. "The other patient is. I’ve already signed the transfer order. We need this bed for post-op recovery. You’ll have to take Grace home."

"Take her home?" My voice cracked. "She’s disoriented. She’s terrified."

"I’ll reschedule her. Next week. Maybe two." He checked his watch, a dismissive flick of the wrist. "I have to scrub in. Don't make a scene, Elyse. It reflects poorly on me."

***

The brownstone was a labyrinth of shadows. Without the hospital's fluorescent glare, Mom was completely blind. I guided her to the guest room, her grip on my arm bruisingly tight. She was sobbing softly, a sound that tore at my chest.

"I'm sorry, Mom," I whispered, settling her into the pillows. "I'm going to get a night nurse. Someone professional to watch you while I sleep. Just rest."

I retreated to the hallway and pulled up the agency’s app on my phone. I selected the highest-rated nurse available for immediate dispatch and tapped *Confirm Payment*.

*Transaction Declined: Insufficient Funds.*

I stared at the screen. That account held fifty thousand dollars—savings I had scraped together specifically for the surgery and aftercare. I tried again. *Declined.*

Ice flooded my veins. I marched down the hall to Collin’s study. The door was ajar. inside, Collin sat behind his mahogany desk, a tumbler of amber liquid in his hand. He wasn't at the hospital. He wasn't in surgery.

"You're home," I said, the words heavy with accusation.

He didn't jump. He just took a slow sip. "The other surgeon took the lead. I'm consulting."

"The money, Collin. Where is the money for Mom's surgery?"

He set the glass down, the crystal clinking against the wood. "I moved it. A temporary investment for the hospital board. To secure my tenure. It’s a bridge loan, Elyse. You’ll get it back in a week."

"You stole from my mother?" I stepped into the room, my hands shaking. "I can't hire a nurse. She’s blind, Collin. She’s helpless."

"Stop being dramatic," he snapped, his facade of calm cracking. "You’re there. You can watch her. I did this for *us*. For my career. Which pays for this house, this life, and eventually, that surgery. Now get out. I have work to do."

He turned his back to me, dismissing me like a subordinate.

***

3:00 AM. The house was silent, save for the wind rattling the old window panes. I sat at the kitchen island, my head in my hands, exhaustion pulling at my eyelids like lead weights. I had checked on Mom three times in the last hour. She was sleeping.

*Just tea,* I told myself. *Five minutes to reset, then I’ll go back to her door.*

The kettle began to heat up. I watched the blue flame, mesmerized.

Then, I heard it. The creak of the floorboards upstairs.

My heart hammered against my ribs. I spun around, sprinting for the foyer. "Mom? Stay there! Don't move!"

"Elyse?" Her voice drifted down, thin and terrified. "Where is the bathroom? It’s so dark."

"Mom, no! You're at the stairs!"

I reached the bottom of the grand staircase just as her foot found empty air. There was no time to scream. The sound was sickening—a heavy, chaotic thudding of bone against hardwood, over and over, followed by a silence that was infinitely worse.

"Mom!" I screamed, falling to my knees beside her crumpled form in the foyer. Her head was twisted at an unnatural angle; a dark pool was already spreading across the parquet floor, soaking into the knees of my jeans.

I fumbled for my phone, my fingers slick with her blood. I dialed 911, then Collin.

*Voicemail.*

I dialed again as the sirens wailed in the distance, closer now.

*Voicemail.*

She died three hours later in the ER, under the bright lights she had prayed to see one last time. Collin never answered.

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